Turks in Europe: Why are we afraid? Preface by Stephen Twigg Sarah Schaefer Greg Austin Kate Parker September 2005 First published in 2005 by The Foreign Policy Centre 49 Chalton Street London NW1 1HY UNITED KINGDOM Email: [email protected] © Foreign Policy Centre 2005 All rights reserved ISBN-13: 978 1 903558 79 4 ISBN-10: 1 903558 79 4 This pamphlet is dedicated to Erden Caner and his fellow ‘Turks in Europe’ who inspired this analysis About the Authors Stephen Twigg joined the Foreign Policy Centre as Director in August 2005. He was involved with the FPC from its conception in 1998 and since then as a Member of the Board. After being General Secretary of the Fabian Society in 1996 to 1997, Stephen was elected as Member of Parliament for Enfield Southgate in 1997 and re-elected in 2001. Following his re-election, he was appointed Parliamentary Secretary to the Leader of the House of Commons, the Rt Hon. Robin Cook MP, and then as a junior minister in the Department for Education and Skills between 2002 and 2005, reaching the post of Minister for School Standards in 2004. Stephen also contributes weekly to the Aegis Trust in their work against genocide. Stephen graduated with a BA from Oxford in Politics, Philosophy and Economics. Sarah Schaefer is Europe Director at the Foreign Policy Centre. Her experience has included spells in the Foreign and Commonwealth Office and as a political correspondent at The Independent. A former Director of Communications at the Social Market Foundation, she was more recently political adviser at the FCO to Dr Denis MacShane when he was Europe Minister. More recently, she was Director of Strategy and Communications at Britain in Europe. Dr Greg Austin is Director of Research at the Foreign Policy Centre in London and the author or editor of several books and major reports on China. He has held senior posts, including Director of Research and Director of the Asia Programme, in the Brussels and Washington offices of the International Crisis Group, the leading multi-national NGO publishing field-based policy analysis in support of conflict prevention. He was the principal author of three reports by the International Crisis Group on the Taiwan Strait published in June 2003. In the course of this project, he interviewed senior officials in the USA, China and Taiwan. He has held posts in the Australian National University, Bradford University (Peace Studies), the Australian Commission in Hong Kong, and the Senate Committee on Foreign Affairs, Defence and Trade in the Australian parliament. He has also worked as a Ministerial adviser in the development cooperation and defence portfolios, as an intelligence analyst, and as foreign affairs and defence correspondent for a leading Australian newspaper. He has postgraduate qualifications in international relations and international law. Kate Parker is a Research Associate at the Foreign Policy Centre, having previously worked at the European Commission Delegation in Washington, D.C. She specialised in the Middle East during her MA in Politics at the University of Edinburgh and is now working towards her MSc in Middle East Politics at the School of Oriental and African Studies. Disclaimer The views in this paper are not necessarily those of the Foreign Policy Centre. Acknowledgments The authors would like to acknowledge the excellent assistance from Christina Winroth. CONTENTS PREFACE...........................................................................................i by Stephen Twigg Germany: A Case Study of Failed Integration?............................1 by Sarah Schaefer Guest Workers, Not Immigrants....................................................5 Problems of Interpretation: Culture and Values...........................10 The Way Forward........................................................................15 Conclusion: Implications for Turkish EU Membership.................17 The Mono-cultural Delusion: Turkey and Migration Politics....19 by Greg Austin and Kate Parker French Voters Are Not Afraid of Turkey......................................21 Britons Are Not Afraid of Turkey..................................................25 Explaining Anti-Immigrant Sentiment: Theories..........................28 Political Messaging about Turkey’s ‘European-ness’..................30 Europe’s Missing ‘Ideology’ of Migration.....................................34 Rising Tide of Xenophobia and Religious Mistrust......................37 The Secular Europe Delusion......................................................39 The Mono-Cultural Delusion........................................................40 Why Does it Matter?....................................................................41 Conclusion and Recommendations.............................................42 PREFACE The prospect of Turkey’s entry into the European Union has triggered a remarkable outburst of fear and anxiety in some European member states. In France, many voters that rejected the constitutional treaty in France cited Turkey’s prospective membership as one of the reasons. This is awkward for Britain, which has taken a strategic lead in ushering Turkey into the EU. British diplomats are working desperately behind the scenes to ensure that the British Presidency is not overshadowed by the collapse of the accession talks. While EU member states agreed last December for the first round of negotiations to go ahead, the rejection of the constitutional treaty gave fresh impetus to those who had nursed the deepest reservations about this historic step in the development of the EU. In France, Dominique de Villepin has already demanded that an extra hurdle be placed in Turkey’s way, calling upon the Turks to recognise the present Republic of Cyprus before the talks can resume. Similarly, Angela Merkel, has made opposition to Turkey’s membership her flagship foreign policy during the election campaign. Turkey, she argues, should enjoy a ‘privileged partnership’ with the EU – a euphemism for second-class status – a proposal that has backing in other, smaller member states such as Austria. Despite this strong opposition, it is still likely that – as so often in the deliberations of the EU – a face-saving diplomatic fudge will be negotiated behind the scenes. A probable compromise will be that enlargement criteria generally will be toughened, without singling Turkey out. Thus, the issue will be kept at bay, without the explicit rejection of Turkey’s membership. It is not difficult to imagine how potentially damaging and perhaps disastrous such diplomatic gamesmanship could be when reported in the Turkish media. Turks in Europe It is lazy to write this off as another EU fiasco. The real problem lies in the fear that the governments of certain member states have of their own publics. It cannot be argued often enough, or forcefully enough, that it is in our collective economic, geo-political and strategic interest to bring our key ally in the Muslim world into the EU. European politicians are rightly sceptical of the American inclination to see a ‘clash of civilisations’ in the 21st Century. At the same time, in the wake of 9/11, the Madrid bombings and the attacks on London, we cannot hide from the problem of militant Islam and its appeal to young Muslims living in the West. Here is a supremely important opportunity to welcome a secularised Muslim state into the family of European nations. But hope will not win over fear unless we understand what makes Europeans frightened of Turkey’s membership. We have to grasp why so many are so afraid, and the role that labour market crowding and supposedly ‘insurmountable’ cultural differences play in nurturing these anxieties. As Sarah Schaefer argues in this pamphlet, some countries such as Germany that have large Turkish populations fear further migration because they have not yet come to terms with the post-war influx of Turks. Rather than integrating migrants into German society, successive German governments have pursued the opposite policy. The result has been the emergence of so-called ‘parallel societies’ where Turks and Germans live alongside each other, often without subscribing to the same set of basic values and even without speaking the same language. Many Turks living in Germany are economically disadvantaged, with unemployment biting particularly hard among the younger generation. In a country that is suffering from soaring joblessness, anxiety about further immigration is inevitable. But millions of Turks already live in Germany and their alienation from mainstream German society cannot continue if that country wants to preserve a civilised level of social cohesion. Citizenship classes and a fresh focus on German language lessons have a part i i to play in drawing in the younger generation and ensuring that they feel a sense of belonging. This should be all about empowerment, rather than indoctrination. Common citizenship brings freedom as well as responsibility. That said, integration is a two-way street, which is one of many reasons why Turkish membership of the EU is about much more than trade and defence. Accession would send a powerful signal not only to Turkey itself, but to those of Turkish extraction already living in Europe; it would be a dramatic step forward in the history of European multi-culturalism and in the more urgent efforts, post-9/11, to find ways of ensuring that Muslims and non-Muslims can live side by side. In the long term, Turkish membership might encourage the emergence of a truly modern, European version of Islam: that is a form of Muslim living that also incorporates a basic set of European values, women’s equality and human rights. This in turn adds urgency to the task of European self definition and identity. To what, exactly, are we inviting new entrants to the EU to integrate? The past fifty years of migration are a story of mixed success. In a world of hectic mobility and change, we will need to be more confident of our own values and the boundaries we set. The prospect of Turkish accession is a welcome opportunity to revisit these questions. The debacle surrounding the No votes in France and the Netherlands on the EU Constitution in May and June this year show that voters in those countries are unhappy with the way their governments are handling this rapid change. Much has been said linking the No votes to opposition to Turkey’s EU accession. Yet, as Greg Austin and Kate Parker argue in their paper, public disaffection toward Turkey’s accession is due more to general disaffection with enlargement of the EU. The real discontent and confusion seems tied more to migration and identity issues at a general rather than to any specific aversion toward Turks and Turkey. So far, the British public seems untroubled by the prospect of Turkey’s membership. This may be explained by the low levels of unemployment in Britain and the heterogeneity of the Turkish- iii Turks in Europe speaking ethnic group in this country. Many British Turks were granted full citizenship a long time ago, and the vast majority speak English. This, more than the fate of the constitutional treaty, is the EU’s moment of truth in 2005. History will not judge us kindly if we fail to treat Turkey with respect, and – in so doing – signal to our own ethnic minorities that we have little faith in their capacity to integrate, or of others to follow them. Translated from political rhetoric into social reality, ‘privileged partnership’ is a shabby offer to make to the millions of Turks that already live in Europe. What will future generations say about us if we turn our backs now, with so much at stake, and so much to gain, on the best Muslim friend we have? Stephen Twigg Director iv
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